But a couple of weeks ago I found something I like better than that: sipping champagne while wearing a bow tie, on a stage in front of 500 people (half of whom also had bow ties on) and talking, about myself.
The occasion was the All Ribbons Ball – a charity gala organised by the Young Garvan Foundation to raise funds for medical research at the Garvan Institute.
That’s enough about things that aren't me, back to me.
I was the guest speaker, and my job was simple: communicate the need for medical research. Of course I jumped at the opportunity. First, because I like science; second, because I survived stage 3 colorectal cancer; third, medical research saved my life; and forth, I don’t mind talking about one, two and three.
And while I don’t believe in fate, I do enjoy basking in the awe that accompanies coincidence. And what a coincidence!? Exactly two years before my speech at the All Ribbons Ball, to the night, I was lying in hospital and getting ready for my first surgery.
The surgery would be massive, as indicated by the felt pen marks covering my abdomen telling the surgeon where to put my new bladder and bum.
I was nervous then, and I was nervous two years later, under different spotlights and advocating for more medical research.
But the nerves faded quickly. You could have heard a pin drop. I had the crowd in the palm of my hand (as speakers know, this is a rare and elegant thing) and I had a ball (pun intended).
I finished. The room stood. Neurotransmitters flooded the reward centre in my brain. And I left the stage, embraced my family and friends, and had another sip of champagne.
Everyone was smiling. My Mum cried. And the whole time I thought of people my age, with my cancer, that I’d met but would never see again.
Damn, survival is bittersweet.
(C) Naomi Hamilton |